If Sir Arthur Conan Doyle had never done
anything else but write Sherlock Holmes
stories, he would be famous today. If he had
not written Sherlock Holmes, he might be
forgotten despite all his other accomplishments...

And these two prepositions would have distressed
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, who came to resent his
most famous literary creation as a distraction
from `more important' work...

- J.L. LellegbergThe Quest for Sir Arthur Conan Doyle

Arthur Conan Doyle (ACD) was a prolific writer. His large body of work
includes poetry, plays, historical fiction, commentary on social and
legal reform, war and military chronicles, enthusiastic articles on
various sport, and finally writings on behalf of Spiritualism. He went
to the Arctic as a ship's doctor, he solved real-life crimes, he was
asked to serve on the 1916 Olympic Committee, and he travelled
widely around the world giving lectures on everything from African
oppression to magic. He also had a secret romance over many years with
the woman who would become his second wife. In short, he led a very
active life and had many adventures of his own--some as interesting
as the characters he created in his fiction.

The Contemporary Author's Database has indepth biographical
and bio-critical information on Doyle life and work.

Among the books written by Conan Doyle, this list contains autobiographical material:

Western Wanderings (1915)
A Visit to Three Fronts (1916)
The New Revelation (1918)
The Vital Message (1919)
The Wanderings of a Spiritutalist (1921)
Our American Adventure (1923)
Our Second American Adventure (1924)
Memories & Adventures (1924)
Our African Winter (1929)

The Sherlock Holmes Collection
owns a complete run of Strand Magazine from 1891 to 1930, where most of Conan Doyle's serialised writings appeared.

This organisation brings together people with an interest in Conan Doyle. The Society
also publishes a regular journal called ACD on Conan Doyle's life and works. It features articles by scholars and enthusiasts and looks at all aspects of Conan Doyle's writings.
The Marylebone Library owns a complete run of the ACD Journal in the Sherlock Holmes Collection.

The Toronto Public Library has the largest publicly accessible collection in the world devoted to Arthur Conan Doyle.
The collections contain different editions of Doyle's works, from the first to the most recent,
along with simplified versions, translations, and adaptations to stage and screen.